Are you sure they were reused Kenner molds byToy Biz? I've heard this before, but I've also heardthat Toy Biz had sculpted new versions that closelycopied the Kenner figures. There are enoughdifferences between the Kenner and Toy Bizversions to leave me in doubt.

Are you sure they were reused Kenner molds byToy Biz? I've heard this before, but I've also heardthat Toy Biz had sculpted new versions that closelycopied the Kenner figures. There are enoughdifferences between the Kenner and Toy Bizversions to leave me in doubt.

Pretty sure that Toy Biz used the Kenner figures as patterns (but not the actual molds) for most of the figures and creating new sculpts for the ones that needed it like the suited Lex, Two-Face, the second Flash and the Batman movie figures.

I compared today... Toy Biz Flash... yeah he put on some weight when compared to Kenner Flash from Super Powers!

The Toy Biz Flash is clearly a different sculpt. TheToy Biz figures in question (as mentioned by krohlf24 above) are:

1-Superman, 2-Wonder Woman, 3-Robin, 4-Mr. Freeze and 5-Penguin.

To my eye, every single one of them has subtledifferences when compared side by side withthe Kenner versions. I haven't taken a closelook at them lately, but I do recall that the Toy BizWonder Woman, for example, is sculpted thickerthan her Kenner counterpart. Not likely to be from a retooled mold in my opinion.

To clarify, I wasn't talking about re-used/altered Kenner molds (Kenner clearly still had them since they were used for Robin Hood, The Dark Knight Collection and Batman Returns), I'm talking about using production figures to pantograph all-new tooling which would have had to be altered for new action features or to allow for the levers and buttons and would have the potential to alter dimensions, details and body structure slightly from the originals.

To clarify, I wasn't talking about re-used/altered Kenner molds (Kenner clearly still had them since they were used for Robin Hood, The Dark Knight Collection and Batman Returns), I'm talking about using production figures to pantograph all-new tooling which would have had to be altered for new action features or to allow for the levers and buttons and would have the potential to alter dimensions, details and body structure slightly from the originals.